the Thaw
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Khrushchev
- In Russia: The Khrushchev era (1953–64)
…leadership there was a cultural thaw, and Russian writers who had been suppressed began to publish again. Western ideas about democracy began to penetrate universities and academies. These were to leave their mark on a whole generation of Russians, most notably Mikhail Gorbachev, who later became the last leader of…
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Latvia
- In Baltic states: Soviet republics
During the Thaw, a general liberalization of Soviet life in the late 1950s and early 1960s, an attempt was made in Latvia to reverse this trend and to nativize the political and administrative elite. The move backfired and triggered a purge of native elements in the…
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Russian literature
- In Russian literature: Thaws and freezes
The years from the death of Stalin until the fall of Nikita Khrushchev in 1964 saw several “thaws” separated by “freezes.” Ilya Ehrenburg’s novel Ottepel (1954; The Thaw) provided this term for a period of relative liberalism. In 1956 Khrushchev delivered a…
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Soviet culture
- In Soviet Union: The cultural Thaw
The cultural “Thaw” that set in under Khrushchev transformed the intellectual environment. It molded a generation, even though Khrushchev reverted at times to repression. The treatment of Boris Pasternak—who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958 for his works, including the novel Doctor…
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